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Dragon Grip Quick-Assist Folding Knife - Gold

Price:

5.25


Spectral Talon Rapid-Deploy Assisted Karambit - Camo
Spectral Talon Rapid-Deploy Assisted Karambit - Camo
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Mythic Dragon Quick-Strike Spring Assisted Knife - Red
Mythic Dragon Quick-Strike Spring Assisted Knife - Red
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Mythic Talon Quick-Assist Folding Knife - Gold Dragon

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This is an assisted opening knife built for the buyer who cares how a blade actually moves. The spring-assisted flipper snaps the 3.5" matte black trailing point into play with satisfying speed, while the liner lock settles in with a clean, positive bite. 440 stainless gives you easy sharpening and honest work performance. The gold dragon grip isn’t just cosmetic—texturing and finger grooves lock the knife into your hand. It rides clipped, ready, and made to be used, not just admired.

5.25 5.25 USD 5.25

KS301751

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

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Assisted Opening Knife for Sale with Real Mechanical Bite

If you’re looking for an assisted opening knife for sale that actually respects the mechanics, this Dragon Grip style folder delivers. It’s not an automatic knife, not an OTF, and not a novelty switchblade pretending to be tactical. This is a spring-assisted flipper built for buyers who care how steel, leverage, and lock-up come together in the hand.

Closed, it’s a compact 4.75 inches. Open, it runs 8.25 inches with a 3.5-inch matte black trailing point blade in 440 stainless steel. Enough blade to work, enough handle to control, and a profile that feels more serious than its price tag suggests.

Why This Isn’t an Automatic Knife (and Why That Matters)

Let’s get the terminology straight, because that’s where trust starts. This is not an automatic knife for sale. It’s a spring-assisted folding knife with a flipper tab. That means:

  • You initiate the opening manually with the flipper tab.
  • Once you start the blade, an internal spring takes over and drives it to full lock-up.
  • It stays safely closed in your pocket until you deliberately engage it.

An automatic knife (what most people casually call a switchblade) opens with a button or actuator that fires the blade from a fully closed position, no assist from your wrist. An OTF automatic sends the blade out the front of the handle. This knife doesn’t do that—and that’s exactly what makes it easier to carry legally in many places, and more acceptable as an everyday EDC tool.

Action, Steel, and Control: The Mechanics That Matter

If you buy knives for the way they move, this one is worth a closer look. The spring-assisted flipper deployment is tuned for a clean, assertive snap without feeling like it wants to jump out of your hand. The detent holds the blade genuinely closed; you have to mean it when you hit the flipper. When you do, the action is fast, with a satisfying mechanical follow-through.

Spring-Assisted Deployment You Can Feel

The flipper tab gives you a natural index finger launch point. As you pull, the blade rides over the detent and the internal spring drives the trailing point forward. There’s minimal hesitation, no gritty start-stop, and the liner lock engages with a solid, audible click. For an enthusiast used to cheap assisted knives with lazy lock-up, this one feels surprisingly intentional.

440 Stainless and the Black Trailing Point Blade

The 3.5-inch blade is 440 stainless steel—nothing exotic, but honest and predictable. It sharpens easily, holds a working edge well enough for daily carry, and shrugs off casual corrosion if you actually wipe it down like you should. The matte black finish kills glare and pairs with the round cutout holes near the spine for a distinctly tactical-fantasy look.

The trailing point profile gives you a sweeping belly for slicing and controlled tip work. Jimping on the spine near the handle anchors your thumb, letting you choke up for finer cuts without feeling like you’re fighting the blade.

Dragon Art, Real Grip: Collector Styling with EDC Reality

The handle is where this knife steps out of the commodity crowd. The full-length gold dragon artwork isn’t just stamped on as an afterthought—it visually wraps the handle, reinforcing the dragon-scale theme in both look and texture. Stainless steel and ABS combine to give you a rigid frame with enough contour to actually sit in the palm.

Finger grooves and a subtle palm swell guide your hand into the same grip every time. Textured surfaces and the dragon-scale pattern help keep the knife planted, even when your hands aren’t perfectly dry. At 5.1 ounces, it’s got enough mass to feel present without crossing into brick territory.

Glass Breaker-Style Pommel and Pocket Clip

The exposed metal pommel terminates in a glass-breaker-style point—useful in emergencies, and a detail collectors notice. The pocket clip rides it in standard tip-down carry, keeping the knife accessible while the dragon artwork disappears in your pocket until you decide to show it off.

Legal Reality: Assisted Opening vs Automatic Knife for Carry

One of the strongest arguments for this design is legal practicality. Many buyers are searching for an automatic knife legal to carry and get lost in a tangle of federal and state rules. Here’s the framework:

  • Under U.S. federal law, the strictest rules focus on automatic knives (true switchblades) in interstate commerce and certain locations, not on assisted openers like this one.
  • Most states treat spring-assisted folding knives differently from automatic switchblades, because they require manual initiation via the flipper.
  • Some states and cities still regulate blade length, carry method, or broad categories of “dangerous weapons.”

Bottom line: this knife is not an automatic or OTF switchblade, which generally makes it easier to carry legally. But laws are hyper-local. Before you buy, check your state and city regulations and confirm how assisted opening knives are classified where you live.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, automatic knives (true switchblades that open via a button or similar actuator) are regulated by both federal and state law. Federal law primarily restricts interstate shipment and possession in certain federal or territorial jurisdictions; it does not outright ban ownership for all civilians. State and local laws vary widely—some allow automatic knives with few limits, others restrict blade length, carry type, or ban them entirely.

This particular knife is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a true automatic, so it’s generally treated differently under the law. Still, you’re responsible for checking your specific state and local regulations before you carry it.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Mechanically, the distinctions matter:

  • Automatic knife / switchblade: In most legal definitions, these are the same thing—press a button, switch, or similar device on the handle and the blade springs from fully closed to fully open.
  • OTF (out-the-front) automatic: A subtype of automatic where the blade travels in line with the handle, out the front, rather than pivoting from the side like a standard folder.
  • Assisted opening knife (this knife): You manually start the blade with a flipper or thumb stud; once started, a spring assists the motion and completes the opening. No handle button, no auto-fire from fully closed.

Collectors care about these distinctions because they affect action, maintenance, and legality. Calling everything a “switchblade” just muddies the water.

What makes this automatic-style assisted knife worth buying?

For the buyer who appreciates action but doesn’t need a full automatic, this knife hits a sweet spot. The spring-assisted deployment has that decisive, mechanical snap people chase in an automatic knife for sale, without the added legal overhead. The 440 stainless blade, matte black trailing point, and reliable liner lock make it a legitimate working EDC, not a toy.

Add the full gold dragon handle art, dragon-scale grip texturing, and glass-breaker-style pommel, and you get a knife that stands out in a drawer full of plain black folders. It’s a piece you can carry, use, and still enjoy as part of a themed collection.

For Enthusiasts Who Choose Their Next Knife on Purpose

If you’re the kind of buyer who reads steel specs, cares about how a flipper actually feels, and knows the difference between assisted and automatic, this knife earns its place. You’re not just looking for any knife for sale—you’re curating tools that say you understand the mechanics. This dragon-gripped assisted folder does exactly that: honest 440 stainless, tuned spring-assisted deployment, reliable liner lock, and a mythic gold dragon theme that doesn’t apologize for standing out.

Buy it as an everyday cutter with character, or as the dragon-themed anchor in a collection of tactical folders. Either way, it rewards the buyer who knows why mechanism and fit matter as much as looks.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 5.1
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Trailing Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440 Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Textured
Handle Material Stainless steel, ABS
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock